KAT6 NEWS & STORIES
Latest updates from the KAT6 Foundation
Find stories of hope, updates from the foundation, international news, and more!
Featured blog posts

Announcing our New Executive Director
Dear KAT6 Community,
On behalf of the KAT6 Foundation Board of Directors, I am pleased to announce the appointment of Aimee Reitzen as the KAT6 Foundation's new Executive Director.
Many of you already know Aimee through her years of service to our community. As a founding Board member and longtime volunteer, she has helped shape the Foundation from its earliest days. Throughout her nearly decade-long involvement, Aimee has led many of the Foundation's communications, awareness, and family support efforts, including developing the KAT6A & KAT6B Caregiver Handbook, launching the Foundation's website, spearheading the creation of the Empowered Grants Program, and helping grow KATwalk from a small grassroots fundraiser into the Foundation's signature annual event. For many families, she has also been one of the first people they connected with after receiving a diagnosis, offering guidance, resources, and a sense of community during an often overwhelming time.
As the parent of a child with KAT6A syndrome, Aimee brings a unique combination of personal experience, professional expertise, and deep commitment to our mission. For nearly a decade, she has worked tirelessly to support families, strengthen connections across our global community, and help advance research and educational initiatives that benefit individuals with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Since our founding in 2017, the KAT6 Foundation has grown tremendously. Together, we have funded important research, established the Patient Registry and iPSC Biobank, expanded educational resources, launched family support initiatives, supported the development of the KAT6 Clinic at Boston Children's Hospital, and built a truly global community. Aimee has been an important part of that journey, and we are excited to see her step into this leadership role as we continue building on that progress.
Please join me in congratulating Aimee on her new role. I look forward to working alongside her as we continue advancing our mission to improve the lives of individuals and families affected by KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Thank you for your continued support of the KAT6 Foundation and the incredible community we have built together.
Warm regards,
Jordan Muller
Chairperson, Board of Directors
KAT6 Foundation
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The Day the World Stopped & The Team That Kept Us Moving
In the Korean culture, we celebrate when a baby turns 100 days old. Historically, it marked the major milestone of a baby surviving past the point where infant mortality was highest. Today, it’s a joyful time for family to come together to bless the baby with happiness and health. On the very day we should have been celebrating Lily’s 100th day of life, we received her KAT6A diagnosis from her neurologist, and the world stopped.

Lily was born at 36 weeks and spent her first 29 days in the NICU. At first, her NICU admission was due to low oxygen saturation but poor feeding and hypotonia quickly followed. Every day, I’d start my routine of trying to nurse her then bottle feed her only for her to end up feeding through a tube. As her mom, I felt immense pressure to figure it out. I was the one who was supposed to be able to take care of her. I spent hours at the NICU, 7 days a week, trying to increase her intake volumes little by little. I assumed this would be very temporary though and that one day, feeding would just click for her and we’d be over this hurdle. But as the days went on, we continued to struggle. Each day brought a new specialist. She became a patient of Neurology, Cardiology, Urology, Audiology, Gastroenterology, Physical Therapy, and Feeding Therapy. Part of me thought the hospital was being overly cautious or just trying to take advantage of my insurance coverage. Why did she need to see all these specialists? We were going to get out of here anyway and resume our normal lives. Looking back now, I don’t think I was fully able (or willing) to grasp the reality of our situation. I was hopeful that this would be a temporary blip and that everything would work out. I never even considered there could be something deeper going on.
After a month, we just barely got to a point with bottle feeding where we received the green light to take her home. I continued to hold out hope that things would just improve naturally, but Lily’s hypotonia made her easily exhausted and she was never able to finish her bottles. Ultimately, she was diagnosed as failure to thrive around the same time we received her diagnosis. This is the point when I realized I needed help. I needed that team of specialists from the NICU that I took for granted. I started to understand the value of early intervention. Lily and I needed help. So at just three months old, Lily started weekly physical therapy and feeding therapy and I started my journey of putting together Lily’s team of doctors.
As a parent of a medically complex child, juggling and repeating are two things I’ve gotten good at. I can list off all of Lily’s doctors, their departments, their locations, and our most recent visit notes. I can coordinate appointments, make calls, and re-arrange schedules. What I can’t do is be an expert in all of these fields, no matter how hard I try. Lily’s Physical Therapist, Sarah, was the one who matched Lily’s pace and worked with her week after week to build her core and help her coordination. Her Feeding Therapist, Rachel, was the one who figured out that using a speciality feeding valve in her bottle would help accommodate her low oral muscle tone. Her Gastroenterologist, Steven, was the one who recommended a high calorie formula to increase her growth velocity. Her Nutritionist, Natalie, is the one who keeps track of her protein intake and volume levels. The KAT6 support group helped us get in touch with Dr. Richard Kelley who was able to review her lab work and recommend the mitochondrial cocktail to support her development. The list goes on and on because Lily has an entire team of doctors, specialists, and therapists who support her (and me).
With KAT6A, I’ve learned that it’s hard to know what the future will look like. It’s hard to anticipate what Lily’s progress will be or where she’ll need more support. I’ve learned that instead of wondering or worrying, we need to just tackle the symptoms as they arise. We need to celebrate all the wins both big and small. We need to take things at Lily’s pace. As a parent, you always hear people say that it takes a village and now I truly understand that. She has a community of people who all share a singular goal - ensuring that Lily is able to thrive. I will forever be grateful for her team. Because of them, Lily recently reached some major milestones. She is able to go from her tummy to an independent sitting position without any help. She’s able to scoot around on her belly and army crawl from one side of a room to another. She is eating level 2 solids and learning to drink from a cup. She is waving hello. And lastly, she has started to do something that bursts my heart wide open. She has started to form the word “mama” with her mouth and has even said it a few times. I’m so proud of my sweet girl and everything she has been able to accomplish with the help of all those who love and support her.




Announcing our New Executive Director
Dear KAT6 Community,
On behalf of the KAT6 Foundation Board of Directors, I am pleased to announce the appointment of Aimee Reitzen as the KAT6 Foundation's new Executive Director.
Many of you already know Aimee through her years of service to our community. As a founding Board member and longtime volunteer, she has helped shape the Foundation from its earliest days. Throughout her nearly decade-long involvement, Aimee has led many of the Foundation's communications, awareness, and family support efforts, including developing the KAT6A & KAT6B Caregiver Handbook, launching the Foundation's website, spearheading the creation of the Empowered Grants Program, and helping grow KATwalk from a small grassroots fundraiser into the Foundation's signature annual event. For many families, she has also been one of the first people they connected with after receiving a diagnosis, offering guidance, resources, and a sense of community during an often overwhelming time.
As the parent of a child with KAT6A syndrome, Aimee brings a unique combination of personal experience, professional expertise, and deep commitment to our mission. For nearly a decade, she has worked tirelessly to support families, strengthen connections across our global community, and help advance research and educational initiatives that benefit individuals with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Since our founding in 2017, the KAT6 Foundation has grown tremendously. Together, we have funded important research, established the Patient Registry and iPSC Biobank, expanded educational resources, launched family support initiatives, supported the development of the KAT6 Clinic at Boston Children's Hospital, and built a truly global community. Aimee has been an important part of that journey, and we are excited to see her step into this leadership role as we continue building on that progress.
Please join me in congratulating Aimee on her new role. I look forward to working alongside her as we continue advancing our mission to improve the lives of individuals and families affected by KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Thank you for your continued support of the KAT6 Foundation and the incredible community we have built together.
Warm regards,
Jordan Muller
Chairperson, Board of Directors
KAT6 Foundation

Questo è Samuele
Ciao a tutti,
Questo è Samuele. È nato il 5 aprile 2022 e, fin dai suoi primi giorni, ha riempito le nostre vite di un amore difficile da spiegare a parole.
Nei primi mesi di vita, però, qualcosa non tornava. Samuele faceva fatica a fissare e mantenere lo sguardo di mamma e papà. Erano piccoli segnali, quasi impercettibili per molti, ma non per la sua mamma, Serena, educatrice d'infanzia. Il suo sguardo esperto e il suo cuore di mamma avevano già capito che c'era qualcosa da approfondire.
Per mesi si è tenuta dentro dubbi e paure. Poi, il 9 agosto, ha trovato il coraggio di condividere tutto con il papà. Da quel momento è iniziato un percorso che ci ha portato presso l'Ospedale Bellaria di Bologna, seguiti dalla Dott.ssa Paola Visconti (Neuropsichiatria Infantile – IRCCS).
All'inizio l'ipotesi era quella di un disturbo dello spettro autistico. Ci dissero che era "uno dei più piccoli mai visti e con tratti tra i più marcati". Parole che fanno tremare le gambe.
Samuele ha iniziato prestissimo la neuropsicomotricità e la piscina, già a 9 mesi, perché presentava una forte ipotonia.
In tutto questo, la mamma non si è mai arresa. Con amore, passione ed estrema dedizione ha messo tutta se stessa in ogni esercizio, in ogni gioco trasformato in terapia, in ogni piccolo progresso conquistato giorno dopo giorno. Sempre con un obiettivo: fare un passo in più. Anche minuscolo. Ma in più.
Oggi Samuele ha quasi quattro anni. Ha buone capacità di comprensione, considerando la sindrome, e buone competenze motorie. Parla usando singoli vocaboli, detti a modo suo, ma chi lo conosce sa perfettamente cosa vuole dire. La valutazione cognitiva ha evidenziato un QI pari a 88, un dato che racconta molto più potenziale di quanto si possa immaginare.
Il 28 novembre 2025 è arrivata la diagnosi genetica: sindrome KAT6A. Una malattia rara, di quelle che ti costringono a studiare, a cercare, a confrontarti con altri genitori nel mondo, a diventare esperto per necessità.
Ma prima di qualsiasi diagnosi, prima di qualsiasi sigla, Samuele è un bambino. È un bimbo felice. Entusiasta della vita. Ama il suo cane Joy, viaggiare, sperimentare cose nuove, mangiare (da buon italiano questa è una delle sue passioni più grandi!), fa basket, continua ad andare in piscina ed è amato da tutti i suoi compagni.
Ai suoi genitori Samuele ha insegnato che le etichette non definiscono una persona. Che i tempi possono essere diversi, ma il valore è lo stesso. Che la forza non fa rumore, ma costruisce ogni giorno.
E questa è solo l'inizio della sua storia.
This is Samuele
Hi everyone,
This is Samuele. He was born on April 5th, 2022, and from his very first days he filled our lives with a kind of love that is hard to put into words.
In his first months, however, something didn't feel quite right. Samuele struggled to fix and maintain eye contact with mom and dad. They were small signs, almost imperceptible to many, but not to his mother Serena, an early childhood educator. Her trained eye and her mother's heart already knew that something needed to be explored further.
For months she kept her doubts and fears to herself. Then, on August 9th, she found the courage to share everything with his dad. From that moment on, a journey began that led us to the Bellaria Hospital in Bologna, where we were followed by Dr. Paola Visconti (Child Neuropsychiatry – IRCCS).
At first, the hypothesis was autism spectrum disorder. We were told he was "one of the youngest ever seen, and with some of the most marked traits." Words that make your legs tremble.
Samuele started neuropsychomotor therapy and swimming very early, at just 9 months old, due to significant hypotonia.
Throughout all of this, his mother never gave up. With love, passion, and extraordinary dedication, she put all of herself into every exercise, every game turned into therapy, every small achievement earned day after day. Always with one goal: to take one more step forward. Even a tiny one. But forward.
Today Samuele is almost four years old. He has good comprehension skills, considering the syndrome, and good motor abilities. He speaks using single words, pronounced in his own way, but those who know him understand perfectly what he wants to say. His cognitive evaluation showed an IQ of 88, a number that speaks of far more potential than one might imagine.
On November 28th, 2025, we received the genetic diagnosis: KAT6A syndrome. A rare condition, the kind that forces you to study, to search, to connect with other parents around the world, to become an expert out of necessity.
But before any diagnosis, before any label, Samuele is a child. He is a happy little boy. Full of enthusiasm for life. He loves his dog Joy, traveling, trying new experiences, eating (as a true Italian, this is one of his greatest passions!), he plays basketball, continues swimming, and is loved by all his classmates.
To his parents, Samuele has taught that labels do not define a person. That timelines may be different, but value is the same. That strength does not make noise — it builds, quietly, every single day.
And this is only the beginning of his story.

Latest blog posts

Ruby, On My Mind
Ruby has been on my mind a lot lately. I mean, she’s always climbing on top of me, standing on my feet, yelling and crying, so it’s hard to NOT have her on my mind. It’s her diagnosis and everything that we’ve been through, the emotions, and the ability to keep my head out of the water through it all.
When it was first suggested to me that Ruby might have a chromosomal abnormality, I looked at her differently. Suddenly I could see her ears in just the wrong position, her eyes spaced just a little off, her nose just barely broader than normal. It clicked so suddenly that I was sure that genetics was where we’d find the answer. As she continued to grow physically, but not developmentally, I was even more sure that genetics was it.
One of the most frustrating things that I have experienced in this journey is doubt from outside sources. I knew that Ruby wasn’t a typical child. Not only did I have 3 other kids that I had experience raising to compare her to, but I lived with her and knew that she did things different. Not just different in the sense that all kids are different from each other and develop differently from each other, but Ruby was significantly unusual. When I would open up about my fears to people, they would tell me not to worry, because so-and-so’s child didn’t talk until this age, or this other so-an-so’s child didn’t walk until this age…”I’m sure she’s just fine, those doctors never know what they’re talking about.” This was a common occurrence for a while. I completely understand other parents trying to encourage, but when you actually live with a special needs child and see all of their deficiencies and experience their struggles, have seen a multitude of professionals that second the opinion, and then have someone outside of the situation tell you that everything you’re feeling is wrong… That’s not ok.
The first genetics testing that was performed came back normal. My first feeling was relief. My second and more profound feeling was angry despair. I knew there was something. Our geneticist did too thankfully, and pushed forward for the next test. We expected to go through the holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years) without hearing anything, so when the phone rang in the middle of December, I was shocked and unprepared. He told me Ruby had a mutation in the KAT6A protein. We scheduled a time 2 days later to meet and discuss everything, but he asked if I had any questions in the meantime. I answered no, because I wanted to brainstorm questions with Daddypants to make sure we get everything covered. I then hung the phone up and asked Dr. Google.
Everyone knows that you should never consult Dr. Google. I once asked him about Ruby’s symptoms before we had any answers and I immediately regretted it. This time we had a specific diagnosis to look up, and I found that there was (and still is) very little literature regarding KAT6A. One information page that I found was hard for my heart to read. Almost every piece of information that was listed described Ruby. The hardest part was the fact that most KAT6A individuals struggle with sleep. The reason this was a struggle was because of the nearly 3 years of little sleep Ruby and I had experienced together. More so, the frustration that I had felt and the times that I was so angry I felt useless. The days that I felt resentment because I was so exhausted. Feeling resentment toward a child is a very guilt-riddled feeling. But learning that her sleep problems are due to her genetic makeup, something that she has absolutely no control over, and knowing the behavior I had had, broke my heart. I sobbed as I read it.
I also saw that oral motor deficiencies are common, as well as speech problems that include nonverbal individuals. Ruby doesn’t speak. We don’t know if she ever will. I know I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, but having a child that you love with your whole being, and knowing that they may never say “mama” or “I love you” is a really hard pill to swallow.
Today has been an emotionally challenging day for me. Tomorrow is my sweet girl’s birthday. I have 3 friends who all had babies within 10 days of Ruby’s birth, and the differences become distinctly more significant each year between them and her, which is often hard.
Tomorrow after breakfast I’ll get her dressed and take her to school for the very first time. She’ll be in a class that is a mixture of typical kiddos and those with special needs. I’m anxious to leave her in someone else’s care, but I’m also excited for the break. Almost 3 hours that I can clean, run errands, bond with Murphy, make uninterrupted phone calls! Ruby has spent much of her time today yelling and crying. She’ll be playing happily one minute and then suddenly just yelling because she’s unhappy about something, but I don’t know what, and she doesn’t know how to tell me. I feel so much frustration because my ears are ringing from all the yelling, and so much sadness because I don’t know what she needs, and so much guilt because I put Murphy down so often to try to tend to Ruby. Murphy is the happiest baby ever and mostly doesn’t mind, but it doesn’t stop the feelings of guilt from rolling in. It’s so challenging when I need to make phone calls but I know that Ruby will not be happy once I’m on the phone.
Most days I feel motivated and passionate and ready to take on KAT6A and prove that Ruby is awesome and able to prevail! Other days, like today, I have to remind myself that it’s ok to feel sad and have a little despair and anger. It’s ok to feel like I’m not good enough or not doing a good job, because deep down I know it’s a lie and that I’m a damn good mom to Ruby and all of her siblings.
I also have to remind myself that it’s definitely ok to brew a second pot of coffee for the 10th day in a row. Here’s to cup number 5 for the day (or is it 6?)!
You can read more by Emily on her personal blog. Emilyhoffhines.wordpress.com

Dr. Arboleda's KAT6A Research
KAT6A Families,On March 1, 2018, Dr. Francis Collins, the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) dedicated his blog posting to Dr. Valerie Arboleda’s research on KAT6A. This blog post provides great visibility for our community and the KAT6A Foundation, and is a very good summary of her research plan. https://directorsblog.nih.gov/…/creative-minds-looking-fo…/…
I also wanted to recognize and thank all of the families who supported the Children’s National Race For Every Child over the past several years. It was funds you raised for those events that supported her initial research. This research provided the early findings that helped her win the NIH grant that will help sustain this research going forward. So congratulations to all of you for helping further KAT6A research. And thank you for your continued support of our new KAT6A Foundation as we continue to raise funds to support future research.
Jordan Muller
Chairperson of the KAT6A Foundation

Eleanor KAT6A: When Dreams Learn to Fly
There are moments in life when you have to find yourself and you also find others. Being a teacher helps to make young people find themselves and others. With our project “Eleanor KAT6A: When Dreams Learn to Fly” we have discovered talents, awakened empathy and found common ground that connects together: family, friends, acquaintances and school community. It shows wonderfully what it means to be strong together, for others and ultimately for yourself as well. We’re taking part in the Strong School Award and I can only say one thing and proudly: You have this project in so many different ways carried along and helped, that dreams fly and become reality.
THANK YOU!

Beloved Pol from Spain
Pol nació por cesárea en diciembre de 2008 en Tremp, un pueblo del prepirineo catalán de la provincia de Lleida (España). Solamente nacer los médicos se dieron cuenta de que alguna cosa no iba bien, tenía alguna malformación y no tenía el instinto de succión que tienen los bebes al nacer, y a consecuencia no comía debidamente.
A las 24 horas de nacer se lo llevaron a la UCI del hospital Arnau de Vilanova de Lleida. Allí estuvo 6 días mientras se le hacía todo tipo de pruebas, también genéticas. Pol tiene unos rasgos característicos que son los que pusieron en alerta a los médicos; los ojitos separados, sus orejitas son distintas una de la otra, la lengua es grande,…
En el hospital descartaron algunos síndromes sin encontrar nada, así que nos fuimos a casa pensando que el problema era todo físico.
Pasaban los días y veíamos que el Pol no se comportaba igual que los niños de su mismo tiempo, y en sus revisiones pediátricas nos dimos cuenta que su cabeza era pequeña y le crecía muy despacio. En un principio se creyó que su cráneo se cerraba demasiado rápido y no dejaba que su cerebro creciera con normalidad, pero no era así, sino que era el cerebro que no crecía y por eso el cráneo se cerraba tan rápido.
A partir de entonces empezamos las visitas a neurología, sin pensar que el problema de Pol iba más allá.-“este niño necesitará mucha estimulación para tirar adelante”- nos decían, y nosotros pues…a estimularlo a tope…
Pero un buen día, un médico nos dijo –“¿vosotros sois conscientes que vuestro hijo será siempre un niño especial?”- supongo que lo sabíamos pero no lo quisimos creer hasta aquel momento.
…síndrome polimalformativo, retraso psicomotor, microcefalia, protusión lingual, disfagia esporádica, hipotonía general, y un largo etc…fueron las palabras que empezamos a oír a partir de entonces.
…eco cerebral, ecocardio, RM craneal, RNM cerebral, tránsitos digestivos, potenciales evocados, cariotipo, estudio de cromosomas, estudio metabólico, y otro largo etc…pero sin ningún diagnóstico.
Los primeros años de Pol fueron muy duros; primero por tener que aceptar lo que estaba pasando y procurar, como madre, no sentirte culpable pensando si había hecho alguna cosa que hubiera perjudicado a Pol mientras estaba en mi barriga; y después por las muchas visitas a hospitales, médicos públicos y privados, pruebas, terapias,… y sobre todo por las operaciones…
A los 3 meses lo operaron de hernias inguinales, todo fue bien.
A los 2 años, fimosis e hipospadia, todo salió bien, también.
A los 4 años, hernia hiatal; Pol siempre tuvo problemas de reflujo gastroesofágico y esto le provocaba acidez y a su vez vómitos que les llaman “poso de café” debido a su color. Resulta ser sangre digerida que tiene en el estómago por culpa de unas pequeñas llagas, y cuando sale esta sangre en el vómito lo hace en el color del café.
Después de algunas pruebas y unos días de ingreso se nos dijo que cuando Pol pesara 10kg; algo que costó un tiempo porque a Pol siempre le ha costado mucho ganar peso; le operarían.
La operación fue bien, le hicieron un NISSEN, que resulta ser una especie de “nudo de corbata” que hacen en la boca del estómago. Nos advirtieron que si este “nudo” no conseguían hacerlo bien preciso cerrarían el estómago más de la cuenta y Pol no podría volver a comer normalmente, y le pondrían un botón gástrico; así que cruzamos los dedos para que todo saliera bien y así fue. Ahora Pol come normal, pero le ha quedado una secuela, no puede vomitar y en algunos momentos les es desagradable, por suerte ya lo tenemos controlado.
A los 6 años, operación de corazón; “tabique interauricular con defecto amplio de 11mm”, es decir que tenía dos cavidades del corazón conectadas y el corazón le crecía más de un lado que del otro y se le tuvo que poner un parche para cerrar el agujero que las unia. Primero lo probaron por cateterismo pero no pudo ser, el agujero era demasiado grande y el parche no aguantaba; así que se lo acabaron haciendo con cirugía. La operación salió bien, pero la recuperación fue muy dura para él.
Otras cosas destacables de la evolución de Pol:
. Comió triturado hasta pasados los 3 años.
. Lengua con poca movilidad y siempre fuera de la boca.
. Babeo abundante.
.No fijó la vista y manipulaba los objetos con las dos manos por separado hasta los 4 años.
. Trastornos del sueño, que aún hoy estamos tratando.
. Problemas de caries en los dientes y está a la espera para sacarle los 4 dientes de leche delanteros de la parte de arriba para que puedan salir los definitivos.
. Le costó mucho voltear (hacer la croqueta)
. Sedestación a los 24 meses aproximadamente.
No gateó nunca y empezó a andar con soporte a los 5 años y a los 6 años empezó a andar solo. Ha hecho y hace diferentes terapias, en su caso todo suma, cualquier estimulo es bueno y ayuda a su evolución.
Pol estuvo utilizando bipedestador durante un largo tiempo, tenía peligro de luxación de cadera debido a no ponerse de pie, los huesos de su cadera no encajaban debidamente. Lleva férulas para andar porque la posición de los pies no es del todo correcta y también le dan más estabilidad.
Va a una escuela “norma” inclusiva. Siempre hemos pensado que mucha parte de su buena evolución ha sido por compartir muchos momentos con los compañeros de su escuela, y siempre ha tenido el soporte que ha necesitado.
Le gustan mucho los sonidos y las texturas, poner cosas dentro de un recipiente y moverlo es su juego preferido, o jugar con una montaña de hojas secas.
Seguro que hay un montón de cosas que explicar de Pol, pero para nosotros, sus padres, lo más importante de todo es que él es un niño muy querido por todos lo que lo conocen, es muy cariñoso y muy feliz, y lo mejor es que esto lo ha conseguido sin tener que hacer ninguna terapia ni tratamiento.
Muchas gracias por dedicar este ratito a leer la historia de nuestro hijo.
-Marco
English Translation:
POL MONSÓ PARRAMON
Pol was born by caesarean section in December 2008 in Tremp, a town in the Catalan pre-Pyrenees in the province of Lleida (Spain). Just being born, the doctors realized that something was not going well. He had some malformation and did not have the instinct of suction that babies have at birth, and a consequently did not eat properly. He was taken to the ICU of a hospital in Lleida 24 hours after birth. There he spent 6 days while he was done all kind of medical tests, also genetic tests.
Pol had some characteristics features that draw attention to doctors; his eyes were too separated, his ears where different from each other, his tongue was bigger than normal…
In the hospital the doctors discarded some syndromes but didn’t find out anything about what was going wrong with Pol.
So we went back home thinking that his problem was a physical issue.
The days went by and we noticed that Pol did not behave like children of his age, and in his paediatric check-up we realized that his head was smaller and was growing very slowly.
At first, it was believed that his skull was closing too fast and did not allow his brain to grow normally. But, actually it was the brain what did not grow enough and that’s why the skull closed so fast.
From then on, we began visit to neurologist, without thinking that Pol’s problem went further –“this child will need a lot of stimulation to move forward”- they told us, and we….to stimulate him in to the fullest…
But one day, a doctor told us –“Are you aware that your child will always be a special child?”- I guess we knew it but we did not want to believe it until then.
…polimalformative syndrome, psychomotor retardation, microcephaly, lingual protrusion, sporadic dysphagia, general hypotonia, and a long etc….were the words we began to hear thereafter.
…cerebral echo, echocardiography, cranial MRI, digestive transits, evoked potentials, karyotype, chromosome study, metabolic study, and other long etc… but without any diagnosis.
Pol’s first years were very hard. First, we have to accept what was happening and try, as a mother, not to feel guilty thinking if I had done something that would have hurt Pol while. He was in my belly; and then for the therapies… and above all for the surgery.
When he has 3 months he underwent inguinal hernias, and everything was fine.
At his 2 years old, phimosis and hypospadias, everything went well, too.
At his 4 years old, hiatal hernia; Pol always had problems of gastroesophageal reflux and this caused him acidity and in turn vomiting that they call “coffee grounds” due to its colour. Its turns out to be digested blood that has in the stomach because of some small sores, and when it comes out this blood in the vomit does it the colour of coffee.
After some medical test and a few days in hospital we were told that when Pol weighed 10kg, they would operate him. That was something that took time because Pol always had a hard time gaining weight; they would operate him.
The operation went well, they did a NISSEN surgery which is kind of “tie knot” that they make in the pit of the stomach. They warned us about if this “knot” wasn’t done quite well he stomach would be more closed than necessary and Pol would not be able to eat normally never again, and they would have to put a gastric button on it. So we crossed our fingers so everything went well and that’s the way it went. Now Pol eats normal, but he has a sequel left, he cannot vomit and sometime it is unpleasant for him. Luckily, we have it under control.
Al 6 years old, a heart operation; “interatrial septum with 11mm wide defect”, that is, it had two heart cavities connected and the heart grew more on one side than on the other, so a patch had to be placed to close the hole that united the cavities. First, they tried it by catheterization but the hole was too big and the patch could not stand; so they ended up doing it by surgerying. The operation went well, but the recovery was very hard for him.
Other remarkable things about Pol’s evolution:
. He had ate crushed food for over 3 years old.
. Little mobility of the tongue and always outside the mouth.
. Lot of drooling.
. He didn’t focus his sight not manipulate objects with both hands separately until he was 4 years old.
. Sleep disorder, which we are still dealing with today.
. Cavity problems in his teeth and he is waiting to his 4 frontal superior milk teeth be removed in order to let the definitive teeth go out.
. Rolling over himself was very difficult for him.
. He was able to keep sitted when he was 24 month old.
. He never crawled. He began to walk with support at 5 years old. One year later he was able to walk alone.
. He has done different therapies, in his case everything add up, any stimulus are good and help his evolution.
Pol had being using the standing frame for a long time. He had a risk of hip dislocation due to not standing up, the bones of his hip did not fit properly. Wears splints to walk because the positions of the feet is not entirely correct and also gives more stability.
He goes to an inclusive “normal” school. We have always thought that a lot of his good evolution was thanks to share many moments with his schoolmates, and he always has the support he needed from them.
He likes sounds and textures a lot, putting things in a container and shake it is his favourite game, or playing with mountain of dry leaves.
Sure there are a lot of things that we can explain about Pol, but for us, his parents, the most important thing above all is that he is a very beloved child for all that know him. He is very affectionate and very happy, and the best thing is that this is not consequence of any therapy or treatment.
Thanks you for taking your time to read our son’s story.

Este domingo hemos hecho un paso más en dar a conocer KAT6A, corriendo la ZURICH MARATÓN BARCELONA junto con unos grandes amigos, los TREMP RUNNERS y Pol, el protagonista, aquí teneis un resumen en imágenes. Nos hemos divertido muchísimo.On March 11,2018 we have made one more step in making known KAT6A, running the Zurich Marathon Barcelona along with some great friends, the Tremp Runners and Pol, the protagonist, here you have a summary in images. We had a lot of fun.Watch Video!



KAT6A Clinic - February 3, 2018
On February 3, 2018, the first KAT6A clinic was held in Baltimore, Maryland, at the Kennedy Krieger Institute. Nineteen families attended and several more followed the clinic by livestream.
We were pleased to have in attendance and as speakers Jacqueline Harris, M.D., Ph.D., Pediatric Neurologist from the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore, Hans Thomas Bjornsson, M.D., Ph.D., Director of Epigenetic and Chromatin Clinic and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Jill Fahrner, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Residency Program Director at Johns Hopkins Genetic Medicine Residency Program and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, and Richard Kelley, M.D., Ph.D., former Director of Division of Metabolism at Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore and current researcher at the Division of Genetics and Boston Children’s Hospital.
After a welcome by KAT6A Communications Director Brittany Green, Dr. Jacqueline Harris presented an overview of the KAT6A clinical syndrome. She explained that KAT6A is a histone modifier epigenetic disorder. This means that the gene function is changed, not the gene sequence, and it is influenced by the histone machinery. It is most often de novo, which means that the genetic change happens in the child and is not inherited from either parent. She reported that there are only a few documented cases, so not much is known about KAT6A syndrome. Researchers need more cases to study. However, there seem to be some features that are nearly universal and some features that seem to be related. Some of the universal features include hypotonia, feeding problems, congenital heart disease, eye or vision problems, skull abnormalities, distinctive facial features, and global developmental delay. Less common but probably associated features are small birth size, perinatal complications, seizures, specific behavioral features, sleep disturbances, immune system irregularities, dental abnormalities, hand abnormalities, and brain MRI abnormalities. She concluded by stating that current researchers learn most from the patients and their families and by drawing from information from other similar epigenetic syndromes.
Next, Dr. Kelley spoke about mitochondrial dysfunction in KAT6A. KAT6A affects metabolic protein absorption, and children with this disorder often have abnormal levels of certain plasma amino acids. Some that he mentioned were citrate, asparagine, and phenylalanine. Using common lab standards, amino acid levels often seem within normal range but a doctor who specializes in mitochondrial disorders uses a conversion scale to determine whether there is a mitochondrial disorder. Dr. Kelley has been working with several families to analyze plasma amino acid levels and then recommending parts or all of a mitochondrial cocktail that he has developed as treatment. Carnitine has been shown to potentiate chromatin opening, and Vitamin B5 helps the body break down carnitine, so these are often helpful to children with KAT6A. Several parents have documented developmental progress in their children who are taking carnitine and vitamin B5. Dr. Kelley is quite confident that carnitine is very beneficial to individuals with KAT6A.
Dr. Bjornsson was the last speaker and he spoke about mendelian disorders of the epigenetic machinery and therapeutic possibilities. He has been studying a disorder very similar to KAT6A called Kabuki Syndrome. They are both epigenetic disorders of the histone machinery. Dr. Bjornsson is studying a mouse model of Kabuki syndrome and has been able to gain much needed information, including some effects that can be reversed using drugs targeting the epigenetic machinery. He also feels that carnitine is likely a good therapeutic treatment for KAT6A. He would like to be able to build KAT6A related data based on seeing more patients with KAT6A. He summarized by emphasizing how rare KAT6A is and that in order to assist in further research, the KAT6A Foundation needs to participate in research by donating results, samples and joining studies, as well as promote research by raising funds to help any interested lab get preliminary data to attract NIH funding. We can also continue to organize meetings and clinics such as this one and continue to increase awareness about KAT6A in the world.
The meeting concluded with some time for the families to meet, share information, and speak individually with the doctors. For those present as well as those families who were listening to the live feed, this first get-together was stimulating, rejuvenating, and gave us hope for our children’s future.
You can view the full presentations by the medical specialist on our KAT6A Foundation Youtube channel.


Meet Chase
Chase is 3 years old and one of the happiest kids I know. He is the third youngest out of four kids and couldn’t love his siblings more. He is happy just to sit by his big brothers and watch them play video games. :)
Chase’s story started November 1, 2014 when he was born via emergency c-section. Nothing about the delivery was ideal. We started out going in to get induced and having Chase manually flipped around in my belly. Once his heart rate fell the doctors decided it would be best to get him out as quickly as possible. When Chase was born he was immediately intubated due to meconium aspiration. Little did we know this was the best thing that could have happened for him.
Chase was brought straight to the NICU. Everyone assured us that it was just for observation and he would be joining us shortly. After hours turned into days of him not coming to our room I knew something was wrong. When Chase was 3 days old he had an X-ray of his lungs to check on the meconium. Luckily his heart was also in this X-ray because that is how they found his heart defect. Chase had 3 holes in his heart along with a valve problem. If it weren’t for him aspirating on meconium we would never have figured this out so soon.
Once the heart defect was discovered the whirlwind started. They started looking into what could have caused this and they decided it was probably genetic. That’s when the testing started, the specialists started coming around, and problem after problem was being found.
Chase had a g-tube placed and a nissen fundoplication when he was 5 weeks old. It was decided that eating orally just wasn’t going to happen for Chase at that time. Exactly 2 weeks later, at 7 weeks old, Chase under went open heart surgery to repair his heart.
At 10 weeks old Chase got to leave the hospital for the first time. We learned what our new normal was with a medically complex child but we still didn’t have an answer to why this all was happening to him. When Chase was one year old we finally got the results form the whole exome sequencing and that is when we got our answer, KAT6A.
Since being diagnosed with KAT6A, we have learned a lot and met so many great people. The KAT6A support group has been a life saver. When your child’s doctor tells you they have never seen a child with your child’s diagnosis and is unable to answer all of the questions you have from this life changing test result you feel completely lost. The other parents of kids with KAT6A have been there to answer questions, give words of encouragement, and just be there when you need it.
This isn’t the life I asked for but it’s the one that was meant for me.
Personal Stories

A Younger Brother's Perspective
My brother Peter has kat6a and he is very smart. He can’t talk. He likes to go to Six Flags and Hershey Park. He loves to go on roller coasters with me. One time he went on a very scary roller coaster but I couldn’t go on it because I wasn’t tall enough. He likes to ride his bike, play golf, tube, ski, play in the snow, drive the bumper cars with me, jump on bouncy houses, go to the beach, go to the pool, to eat food and build snowmen. He likes to eat a lot of food. My parents are finding out how we can help him be like a normal kid. He doesn’t go to school because he got kicked out of school because of his behavior. Now he is at home school. He also likes to eat stuff with sugar. Sometimes at my school some people make fun of him, they say “brrr” and clap their hands like my brother. I feel sad for him. I tell the people who do that did you know that my brother helps me in stuff but sometimes he is annoying. My brother is very good in math he got 99 percent on his math test. He’s better than me in reading the notes, the first time he sees the notes he plays them but now I know how to do that because I know what the notes are.

Peter's Experience with a Mitochondrial Cocktail
I live in New York, USA. My son, Peter, was diagnosed with severe autism and global developmental delay at the age of 18 months. We didn’t have a KAT6A diagnosis till the age of 8 years old. After many online research, after talking with multiple geneticists around the country and talking to other families with the same diagnosis, I started giving Peter the mitochondrial cocktail following Dr Richard Kelley recommendations.
Here’s my experience with the mitochondrial cocktail:
– At 4 weeks after the start of the cocktail, Peter became potty-trained during the day without any training. He pulled his pull up off, refused to put it back on.
-At 2 months, Peter started riding his bike with no training wheels and playing soccer. He became able to kick the ball and run after it till he scores.
-At 2.5 months, he started skiing independently. I used to try to teach how to ski since he was 3yo. I used to spend hours and hours picking him up off the snow with no result. I tried different kind of reinforcers (food,..) with no result. After the cocktail, he just went down the hill by himself, He can ski independently now and knows how to make turns.
-At 2-3 months, I started noticing an increased strength in playing ice hockey and street hockey with a better understanding of the game. His typing ability improved too, he used to have severe apraxia while typing (type the letter next to the letter he wants to type…).
-At 3-4 months, Peter’s fingers on the piano became stronger, he became able to play harder songs with less training and less frustration. I also noticed an increase in “common sense” like for example putting his backpack in the car instead of throwing it on the floor next to the car and riding the car without his backpack. Another example, when we go to the public library, he knows by himself that he has to go to the children section, and walks independently without showing him directions to the play area inside the children section. In the past, he used to grab books the time he enters the library, throw a tantrum on the floor. The most important milestone is that Peter started to say few words that I can understand.
-At 11 months, Peter became potty-trained at night. His speech is slowly getting clearer. His fine and gross motor skills are still getting better.

Jack's Story
Jack was born at full term in February 2016. As soon as Jack came into the world, he decided to give his parents a run for their money. He was born with Sagittal Synostosis, a heart murmur, Laryngomalacia, and undescended testicles. In the first year of Jack’s life he had 3 surgeries: a Cranial Vault Reconstruction to fix the Synostosis, a Supraglottoplasty to help with the Laryngomalacia, and a double Orchiopexy, which also resulted in a hernia repair. At that time, we also had a gastronomy tube placed because Jack had stopped eating by mouth around 6 months and was losing weight. Throughout all of this, Jack was a trooper. He was strong and happy and was often found smiling in post-op… the nurses and doctors easily fell in love.
Jack began receiving PT, OT, and Speech Therapy services through Birth to Three at 4 months old. Now 21 months, he continues to receive these services in addition to a private Speech Therapist, who focuses on feeding therapy since Jack is still primarily fed through a g-tube, and an Aquatic Physical Therapist. We are hoping that within the next year and a half Jack will be able to eat solely by mouth and we can remove the g-tube. Jack attends a special needs program for children under the age of 3. He goes 2 days a week for 3 hours a day. He has a one-to-one aide, and it’s the best thing we could have found for him. He’s challenged and content, and we’ve seen major muscular and cognitive developments since he started in September 2017.
Last winter Jack spent more than 23 days in Yale’s PICU for Rhinovirus and Parainfluenza. The first time we brought him to the ER was the most traumatic. He had been sick for a few days after Thanksgiving. We found him in his crib one morning grey and struggling to breathe. He was intubated upon arrival at the hospital and remained so for 9 days. Although Rhinovirus is a common virus for children to contract, Jack struggled overcoming the illness because of his abnormal airway obstruction, which is simply a part of his anatomy. The next 2 hospital stays were for the same reason. Although the doctors discussed putting in a trach to avoid future dangerously low oxygen levels, we decided to hold off to see whether or not Jack can overcome this on his own as he grows bigger and stronger.
In addition to being followed by 12 specialists, Jack works with Dr. Richard Kelley, an expert in metabolic diseases and biochemistry, and Vicki Kobliner, a nutritionist. Dr. Kelley created a mitochondrial ‘cocktail’ for Jack based off of his metabolic abnormalities, and we’ve seen great improvements in Jack’s development since he began taking it. Vicki helped create a blenderized diet for Jack, so he eats a well balanced nutritious meal 3 times a day, all through his g-tube. He probably eats a healthier diet than most people I know!
It has definitely been a journey thus far with our little man. He brings us so much happiness everyday despite all that we’ve been through with him. Watching Jack hit milestones brings tears of joy to our eyes. His most recent accomplishment is sitting up by himself! We can only hope that he’ll continue to develop and thrive, and we can’t wait to see what he achieves next!

Izzy’s KAT6A Journey
Life for us living with this has been a challenge some days. Izzy was a preemie of 2lbs 10 oz. She was in the NICU for 5 weeks. She is not our biological daughter but came to live with us 2 weeks post NICU. From the start she vomited most of her feedings. She grew very slowly at first and at 5 months old was hospitalized with pneumonia from aspirating her spit up. They did a swallow study and diagnosed her with GERD. We then started feeding her 1-2 oz of severely thickened formula every 2 hours….slowly increasing until we were at 3-4. She never ate more than 4oz until she was over 2. Needless to say, I was exhausted!
As she has aged, we experienced slightly delayed walking and talking. She had a tough time potty training but by 4.5…she had it down for the most part. Today she is 6.5 and in kindergarten. We are seeing learning delays by about 2 yrs but she is so happy and brightens any room! We are finishing testing with neuropsych and occupational therapy and will have an appointment with the school for an IEP soon.

Ma Guerrière Chloé
Ma plus belle histoire d’amour. ..
Ma plus grande bataille…
Mon étoile de l espoir…
Mon trèfle à quatre feuilles, unique, extraordinaire…
Toi!!!
Ma guerrière Chloé
-Poème de Carine (la mère de Chloé)
English Translation:
My most beautiful love story. ..
My biggest battle …
My star of hope …
My four leaf clover, unique, extraordinary …
You!!!
My warrior Chloe
-Poem by Carine (Chloe’s mother)

L’expérience d’une Mère Française
Bonjour voilà nous avons eu le diagnostic du KAT6A le 13 septembre dernier notre petite Lysie âgé de 3 ans. Ce qui engendre des retard psychomoteur intellectuelle et des acquisitions elle est hypotonique . Je vais essayer de vous expliquer au mieux le parcours de notre princesse. Dès la naissance Lysie ne s’alimenter pour bcp à la maternité il nous disais que c’était normal qu’elle avais avaler du liquide amniotique. Lui donner le biberon était un combats Lysie pleurer beaucoup on avais l’impression qu’elle souffrait o était impuissant.
Même les geste du quotidien était difficile la promener en poussette ou en voiture était un calvaire que des pleure même les courses impossible jusqu’à à peut près 1 Mois sa va mieux Lysie commence et être un peut plus poser. Au niveau repas la a etait le gros problème Lysie vommisser énormément elle manger pas de morceau il a fallu tout broyer dans son lait à l’aide d’un robot puissant le Thermomix ce qu’il lui a permis de commencer à prendre un peut de poid il y avait plus aucun morceau . En janvier dernier j’ai réduit fortement mon activité professionnelle pour m’occuper de Lysie je n’est pas lâcher prise j’ai insister surtout sur le repas à je vous dis pas Lysie a énormément vomi mais nous avons eu une victoire Lysie mange normalement de tout et de régale c’est un plaisir de la voir manger .
Sur le développement Lysie a marcher tard à 20 mois la piscine la beaucoup aider elle a tenu assise à 10 mois à peut près. Actuellement Lysie ne joue pas vraiment avec ces jouet elle jette plutôt impossible de la tenir sur une activité plus de 10 min nous travaillons sur cela a l’aide d’une éducatrice spécialisée elle est tjr frustrer et a peur de tout. Elle met encore tout à la bouche et croque dans tout à en avoir des morceau en bouche . Elle a des problèmes ophtalmologique on a rdv prochainement ,une malformation aux oreilles petites oreilles donc très petit conduit. Lysie marche mais tombe facilement et se fatigue vite. Elle a une malformation au cœur également . Pour notre part elle n’est pas constipée elle a un rythme régulier une a deux fois par jour à la selle .
Voilà j’espère avoir pu vous faire partager la vie de lysie vraiment pas facile pour moi d’expliquer.
bonne réception amicalement
Séverine
English Translation:
Hello,
Here we have received the diagnostic of KAT6A last September 13 for our little Lysie 3 years old. This generates intellectual psychomotor delay and acquisitions. She is hypotonic. I will try to explain the best course of our Princess. From birth she did not nurse well. They said it was normal since she had swallowed amniotic fluid. The bottle was a fight. Lysie cried a lot. We had the impression that she was suffering or was helpless.
Even the gesture of daily life was difficult. To walk her in a stroller or car was an ordeal. Her crying made it impossible until close to 1 month where she seemed better. Mealtime was a big problem. She vomited a lot and everything had to be ground into her milk using a powerful robot Thermomix which allowed her to start gaining a bit of weight. In January I strongly reduced my professional activity to take care of Lysie. I did not let go. I continued to insist particularly on the meal. I tell you that Lysie threw up a lot but we had a victory. Lysie now eats normally of anything. It is a pleasure to see her eat.
Developmentally Lysie walked at 20 months. The pool was a big help. She sat up at about 10 months.
Currently Lysie does not really play with her toys. She just throws them. Impossible to keep her interested in an activity longer than 10 minutes. We are working on this with the help of an education specialist. She is frustrated and scared of everything. She still puts everything in her mouth and bites everything to have a piece in her mouth. She has problems with her eyes. We have an appointment soon. She also has a malformation to her small ears so she has very small ducts. Lysie walks but falls easily and gets tired fast. She also has a heart defect. For our part, she is not constipated. She has a steady pace of one to two times a day in the bathroom.
Here, I hope to have been able to share the life of Lysie. Really not easy for me to explain.
Your friend,
Severine

Kristen's Story
Here is some of Kristen’s story….diagnosed with KAT6A at age 28, she is 29 1/2 now. She is a beautiful young woman who has endured more medical challenges than anyone I have ever known. She is a twin (fraternal), was a preemie, and born hypotonic on the short end of placental discordance. We never stopped searching for answers as to why she struggled so much and her twin sister never did.
One particularly difficult area of development for Kristen was her speech and language. Kristen did not make any sounds as a baby, deafness was ruled out, speech therapy started at 11 months. A larenoscopy showed vocal cords were weak and inconsistently responded to sound stimulus. Oral motor therapy shortly followed. Teaching Kristen to use her tongue and try different food textures (eating had been a struggle since birth. At birth she lacked the oral motor strength to suck a bottle) was important in helping her develop more oral motor strength needed for speech. A special pre school with daily OT, PT, and speech therapy was next at age 2.5. Diagnosed then with apraxia of speech. We taught her sign language to communicate while never giving up on speech. Kristen entered kindergarten (a special day class for language impaired children)with two words, neither was her name. Daily speech therapy at school and we continued private therapy twice a week. The progress was slow, but progress was there. Kristen eventually learned more words, mumbles at first, articulation poor. Over the years it continued to improve, albeit it very slow. By the time Kristen left elementary school she spoke short sentences, not necessarily grammatically correct but she was able to communicate verbally her needs and wants (with a little patience getting those thoughts out). That continued to improve, and private therapy continued, and continues to this day. Articulation became somewhat clearer, word finding is still an issue, but for the most part Kristen can communicate to even strangers and have them understand her. Will her speech and language ever be normal, no, but her growth still continues to this day at age 29, as does her therapy and her will to communicate with those around her.
Medical News

KAT6 Clinic Opens at Boston Children's Hospital
Major Development: A KAT6 Clinic Has Opened at Boston Children’s Hospital
We’re excited to share that a new multidisciplinary clinical program for individuals with KAT6A and KAT6B is now open at Boston Children’s Hospital, led by Dr. Olaf Bodamer and Dr. William Brucker. This clinic will serve as a true medical home for families, offering coordinated care across specialties.
The KAT6 Foundation is proud to have helped fund the development of this program, made possible through the generosity of our donors.
As the team continues organizing the clinic, families who are interested in care are encouraged to contact rarediseases@childrens.harvard.edu. This inbox is monitored several times a day, and families can expect a response within 24 to 48 hours. After reaching out, families will receive an intake form and the opportunity for a brief informal meeting to discuss expectations. Appointments for an initial evaluation are available on a regular basis with Dr. Brucker and/or Dr. Bodamer.
In addition to patient care, the clinic will gather natural history data and collect biospecimens for the IRB-approved KAT6 biorepository, which supports ongoing biomarker discovery. The clinicians will also continue collaborating with research partners such as the Serrano Lab at Boston University.
For appointments or additional details, families can reach the clinic coordinator at rarediseases@childrens.harvard.edu
300 Longwood AvenueBoston, MA 02115


Bowel Obstructions in the KAT6 Population
Parents and caregivers of children or adults with KAT6 disorders are the first to recognize whether the person they care for is in distress. Those continually looking after the person’s needs are the best ones to intervene and advocate for medical care when it appears that a problem is present and getting worse. But what are we looking for and when might it call for emergency care?
INTESTINAL BLOCKAGE
Gastrointestinal issues are common with KAT6 disorders. Low muscle tone throughout the body may mean low motility in the gut — weak contraction of the muscles that mix and propel contents in the gastrointestinal tract. When there is a temporary lack of normal muscle contractions of the intestines this is known as ileus — not a blockage, but a stoppage. (Think of a blockage as a train wreck, preventing any other train from passing through, and think of a stoppage as merely a train sitting on the tracks and failing to move along.)
When the contents of the upper or lower bowel cease to move, the resulting mass can become enlarged and can harden as it dries out, stretching the part of the intestine where the mass occurs. Regular contractions can return and eventually move it along, but if the contents sit too long they can begin to ferment and decay, with potentially serious results. Vomiting and diarrhea, for example, are normal consequences once the body applies its other resources to the obstruction.
If it does not eventually start moving on its own it may respond to non-invasive treatments such as stimulants taken orally or a rectal enema, depending on proper assessment of the location of the problem. But if there is a physical barrier to continued movement of intestinal contents, the problem can quickly become life-threatening.
MALROTATION AND VOLVULUS
Around the tenth week of gestation, as the intestinal tract is developing, it normally moves from the base of the umbilical cord into the abdominal cavity. As the intestine descends into the abdomen, it makes two rotations and settles into its normal position. When a portion of the intestine, or even the entire intestinal tract, fails to lie properly in this space, it ls known as a malrotation.
A malrotation may cause immediate symptoms and problems after a baby is born or may lead only to intermittent trouble, or it may cause no problems at all. In some people it is not discovered until well into adulthood or perhaps never discovered at all. In others, it can be the source of repeated obstructions. The point is, a malrotation is an anatomical defect and one that must be suspected if problems arise, especially in early childhood. It can lead either to continuous or intermittent problems but is not necessarily dangerous.
When a loop of intestine and the membrane that holds it in place twist around each other like sausage links or a kinked garden hose, this causes a bowel obstruction called a volvulus. A certain kind of volvulus in a horse is commonly called a torsion. It is not going to clear and open back up on its own, and normal muscle contractions in the gut are not going to force a trapped mass of intestinal contents to move past it.
The trapped material, already partially digested, continues to break down, though, and some contents may be ejected as diarrhea or gas, while most of it will remain and swell the gut. A person suffering a volvulus, who enters emergency surgery soon enough, may still lose part of the intestinal tract in surgery. Without emergency surgery a volvulus is almost certain to be fatal.
If a volvulus is suspected in an emergency room, a buildup of gas in the intestine may show up on a series of x-rays, which must be taken at intervals long enough for changes to appear but no so long that surgery comes too late.
OTHER GI ISSUES
The esophageal sphincter is the valve between the esophagus and the stomach. When the muscle that keeps this valve closed is weak, a blast of burning stomach acid may rise as far as the throat. This is acid reflux. A baby with KAT6A or KAT6B can be resting quietly in a baby seat, alert and cheerful, and suddenly scream in pain and terror. If this happens with any frequency, reflux should be suspected when nothing else is likely.
Dumping syndrome is a group of symptoms, such as diarrhea, nausea, and feeling light-headed or tired after a meal, that are caused by rapid gastric emptying, a condition in which food moves too quickly from the stomach to the duodenum. This can become an issue after a person has undergone GI surgery. Adjustments in diet or medicine can resolve things, and, if surgery was involved, time may be the best healer.
OUR NEED TO REMAIN VIGILANT
Communication problems are common with the KAT6 population as well as an apparent high tolerance for pain. Children and adults with KAT6 disorders, especially those who can’t tell us that something hurts or where it hurts, need to be monitored continually for lack of gut movement. Constipation, (a general term for any disruption of intestinal activity that leads to pain and irregularity of bowel movements), can make a normally cheerful person irritable.
A volvulus is a rare occurrence in the general population, but among the KAT6 population it seems common enough to be of serious concern. Although we are still studying the matter and don’t have statistics, it appears that untreated bowel obstructions are the leading cause of death among children affected by KAT6 disorders.
Many of those with KAT6 disorders are tube-fed through a gastrostomy. For some, this is their only source of nutrition, and so variations in gastrointestinal activity are less likely to be caused by daily changes in diet.
What is the person’s normal frequency of bowel movements? Has it been a day longer than normal? Two days? Is she also becoming irritable, combative, unable to sleep? Does this happen in repeating cycles? What does her blood work show? What does a gastroenterologist say? Do cycles of irritability correlate with cycles of unusual toilet contents? Someone close to the patient needs to be asking these questions and insisting on answers.
People with KAT6 disorders may show no signs of a bowel obstruction until it has progressed to a serious degree. They may quietly tolerate the increasing pain until it has become severe. An obstruction can go from bad to dangerous quickly. It is hard to differentiate an obstruction from other gastro-intestinal issues. Obstructions can happen again and again and can strike at any age.
While it is probably more likely to become an issue early in a child’s life, an affected person who has a KAT6 disorder can seem to be OK for years, perhaps irritable at times for no apparent reason. Just because it hasn’t been diagnosed at an early age it could be that a complete obstruction simply hasn’t happened yet. The best prevention of complications is be on top of it all of the time. Not all doctors understand that, with a bowel blockage, you can still pass diarrhea — the assumption seems to be that if they’re passing anything at all then there’s no obstruction.
Medical services vary from country to country, and while another country may have excellent hospitals and perfectly competent doctors, they may also have different approaches to parent involvement, different protocols for intervention, and different standards for what can and should be treated.
Compounding the danger, a doctor may not consider an intestinal obstruction if a parent or caregiver hasn’t suggested it, and so a doctor wants to ascribe a change in behavior to anxiety, a virus, a food allergy, and so on. Meanwhile the child has mere hours to get the problem resolved or else irreversible damage has been done with a high potential for fatal results.
LIVING WITH IT
We aren’t supposed to tell people about our poop or ask others about theirs. With KAT6 in a family we could save a life if we get beyond that taboo. In our own experience, Beth and I share in all phases of the care of our son, Sam, who is now 32 years old. He is one of the more severely disabled individuals with KAT6A syndrome, and so we must pay constant attention to all the signs he gives us. We “read” his behavior, we both examine his bowel movements daily or at least describe to each other what he has done. (He even has an “I POOPED TODAY” T-shirt.)
Sam has had a gastrostomy and feeding tube since he was a baby and receives all medicine and sustenance through the tube. He had a nissen fundoplication during his first surgery as a baby, so he cannot burp or vomit. He had a malrotation of the duodenum at birth (corrected by surgery), reflux as a baby, a volvulus before he was two (indicated by changes in a gas pocket on successive x-rays), a second near-fatal obstruction due to adhesions, and numerous instances of ileus and other partial obstructions requiring hospital stays. As an adult he is now treated for ulcerative colitis. He does not walk and can’t speak. But he is engaging and even mischievous, affectionate, enthusiastic, and popular. When he hurts, his only ways to show it are in withdrawal, resistance, and restlessness.
We are fortunate that Sam has had doctors who care about him as a person and who listen to us, his parents. His doctors, though, need to trust what we are telling them, and so our information must be reliable. By educating ourselves, paying close attention to the signs that Sam gives us, and making sure we communicate consistently and accurately with medical providers, we have been Sam’s best advocates.
Many parents have observed GI benefits from a mitochondrial cocktail and other supplements, such as Cytra-3. Learn more about these supplements by watching Dr. Richard Kelley’s presentation from our 2022 Conference. It is essential to consult your child’s physician before starting anything new.
Foundation News

Announcing our New Executive Director
Dear KAT6 Community,
On behalf of the KAT6 Foundation Board of Directors, I am pleased to announce the appointment of Aimee Reitzen as the KAT6 Foundation's new Executive Director.
Many of you already know Aimee through her years of service to our community. As a founding Board member and longtime volunteer, she has helped shape the Foundation from its earliest days. Throughout her nearly decade-long involvement, Aimee has led many of the Foundation's communications, awareness, and family support efforts, including developing the KAT6A & KAT6B Caregiver Handbook, launching the Foundation's website, spearheading the creation of the Empowered Grants Program, and helping grow KATwalk from a small grassroots fundraiser into the Foundation's signature annual event. For many families, she has also been one of the first people they connected with after receiving a diagnosis, offering guidance, resources, and a sense of community during an often overwhelming time.
As the parent of a child with KAT6A syndrome, Aimee brings a unique combination of personal experience, professional expertise, and deep commitment to our mission. For nearly a decade, she has worked tirelessly to support families, strengthen connections across our global community, and help advance research and educational initiatives that benefit individuals with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Since our founding in 2017, the KAT6 Foundation has grown tremendously. Together, we have funded important research, established the Patient Registry and iPSC Biobank, expanded educational resources, launched family support initiatives, supported the development of the KAT6 Clinic at Boston Children's Hospital, and built a truly global community. Aimee has been an important part of that journey, and we are excited to see her step into this leadership role as we continue building on that progress.
Please join me in congratulating Aimee on her new role. I look forward to working alongside her as we continue advancing our mission to improve the lives of individuals and families affected by KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.
Thank you for your continued support of the KAT6 Foundation and the incredible community we have built together.
Warm regards,
Jordan Muller
Chairperson, Board of Directors
KAT6 Foundation

KAT6 Foundation: Leadership Update
Dear KAT6 Families, Friends, and Partners,
We are writing to share an important update about the KAT6 Foundation’s leadership.
The Board of Directors would like to share an important recent change to our organization. After eight years of incredible service to our community, Natacha Esber and Emile Najm, the founders of the KAT6 Foundation, have made the decision to step down from their positions as Chair of the Science Committee and CEO, respectively. We extend tremendous gratitude to them as the creators of our foundation, and as tireless advocates for our mission to advance scientific research and to support our families. There is no part of this organization that has not been touched by their incredible passion, vision and drive. Natacha has advanced scientific research and provided countless hours of medical advice to numerous families. Emile has run the legal and financial aspects of our foundation, as well as overseeing all of our committees. Together they created our conferences and enthusiastically welcomed new families into our fold.
We are beyond grateful to them for founding this organization and for the many years of dedication, vision, and relentless work they have poured into building a brighter future for individuals living with KAT6A and KAT6B. Their leadership helped create the strong foundation we stand on today, and because of their efforts, our community, our research network, and our global visibility have grown in extraordinary ways.
They will always be a cherished part of our community, and we hope you will join us in thanking them for their years of service and lasting impact.
Our Board of Directors is fully engaged and will be stepping in collectively to ensure uninterrupted operations during this transition. In the meantime, Jordan Muller will be serving as Interim Executive Director, providing operational leadership, coordination, and continuity.
Our Science Committee members will continue their work without interruption, and all funded research projects and partnerships remain active. There will be no delays or changes to ongoing scientific or community initiatives.
The heart of the KAT6 Foundation has always been our community and the many dedicated parents, caregivers, clinicians, and volunteers who bring this work to life. That remains absolutely unchanged.
As the Foundation evolves, we will post several new roles in the coming weeks. If you or someone you know would like to join our mission, we would love to hear from you. Our team is mostly made up of parents and caregivers, but not entirely, and we welcome anyone with a passion for helping this community thrive. Please keep an eye out for position announcements soon.
We are also thrilled to share that planning is underway for our first ever KAT6 Family Weekend in 2026. This is a milestone event many of our families have dreamed of. We cannot wait to bring our community together in person for connection, learning, joy, and support. The date and location will be announced in January 2026, and we look forward to seeing you all there.
We are confident that this next chapter will bring continued growth, clarity, and opportunity for our community. Our mission remains unwavering: to advance research, strengthen family support, and build a connected global community for every individual living with KAT6A and KAT6B.
With deep gratitude for Emile and Natacha’s incredible service, and with excitement for the road ahead, we thank you for your trust, your compassion, and your partnership.
With appreciation,
The Board of Directors
KAT6 Foundation
For more information: Q and A

The Story Behind 'KAT6 and Me': Turning a Family's Journey into Hope
When Kristin Ross O’Brien’s son Max wanted to write a school report about his younger brother’s rare genetic condition, she made a surprising discovery; there were no children’s books about KAT6.That moment sparked a dream: to create the story that didn’t yet exist.Together with her friend and child life specialist, Dr. Lindsey Murphy, Kristin brought that dream to life in KAT6 and Me; a beautifully written and illustrated book that teaches, comforts, and celebrates children living with KAT6 disorders, while helping others understand and include them.“The idea for KAT6 and Me began with Max,” Kristin recalls. “He wanted to write about KAT6, but there weren’t any books, not even for adults. From that moment, it became our family’s wish to one day write the children’s book that didn’t exist; a story that could teach, comfort, and celebrate kids like Bash, and help others understand them too.”
A Collaboration Built on Friendship and Shared Purpose
Kristin shared her idea with longtime friend Dr. Lindsey Murphy, an associate professor of child life at Missouri State University. The connection between the two was immediate.“I’ve been a witness to Bash’s journey from the beginning,” Lindsey says. “Knowing there was something tangible I could do to support their efforts for education, inclusion, and advocacy was an easy ‘yes.’”The writing process flowed naturally.“We’d already been friends for years, connected through a playgroup for our kids,” Lindsey explains. “Kristin brought the heart and soul. She knows her child and the KAT6 community better than anyone. My background as a child life specialist helped us make complex or emotional topics understandable for children. Together, we blended those strengths.”Kristin agrees that the process was both heartfelt and fulfilling.“We wrote this book in the fringes of our lives- over coffee while our kids happily destroyed the playroom,” she laughs. “We talked about how to highlight Bash’s abilities instead of just his challenges, and how to weave facts into storytelling that still felt magical.”
The Heart of the Story: Bash
At the center of KAT6 and Me is Bash, Kristin’s youngest son, whose journey has inspired many.“Bash came into our lives first as our foster son when he was six months old and instantly captured our hearts,” Kristin shares. “Before he turned two, we were blessed to officially adopt him and make him a forever part of our family.”Diagnosed with KAT6B syndrome as an infant, Bash’s life has been filled with both challenges and incredible joy. Despite facing multiple therapies, surgeries, and medical complexities, his optimism and determination shine through.“Every small victory, every sound, and every step for Bash is a celebration,” Kristin says. “He’s a kindergartener, a disability advocate, and even a playground philanthropist. . . helping bring adaptive playground equipment to our small town. His happy personality touches everyone he meets.”
A Bridge for Families, Educators, and Professionals
Both authors hope KAT6 and Me will serve as more than a story. They see it as a bridge for connection and understanding.“For families, I hope this book gives language they can use to explain a diagnosis in a positive, age-appropriate way,” Lindsey says. “For professionals, I hope it reminds them that small gestures, listening, explaining clearly, offering hope — make a lasting impact.”Kristin adds,“My greatest hope is that KAT6 and Me becomes a bridge. I want families who are newly diagnosed to feel less alone. I want siblings to have words that help them explain and celebrate their brothers and sisters. I want teachers and classmates to see what inclusion looks like- to recognize that kids with complex needs have the same love of laughter, friendship, and play as any other child.”
A Ripple of Awareness
Since its release, KAT6 and Me has reached far beyond the rare disease community.“We expected families affected by KAT6 to be our main audience,” Lindsey notes, “but teachers, advocates, and libraries across the world have embraced it as a tool for inclusion and awareness.”Kristin and her family have shared the book through local events and readings in Boonville, Missouri, and have donated copies to schools, hospitals, and libraries.“Parents of children with rare diagnoses have sent us pictures of their kids holding the book,” Kristin says. “Teachers have told us they’re using it to start conversations in classrooms. And siblings, kids like my Jack, Max, and Leah, now have a way to explain and understand their brother’s condition. That’s exactly what we dreamed this book could do.”
Giving Back to the Community
To honor the children and families affected by KAT6 disorders, all royalties from KAT6 and Me are donated to the KAT6 Foundation to support research, awareness, and family connection.“Every purchase helps fund the search for answers and celebrates children like ours,” Kristin explains.Lindsey and Kristin’s collaboration continues, with plans for additional projects to serve families across the KAT6 community.“Our conversations keep sparking new ideas,” Lindsey says. “We already have plans for more books to reach other audiences within the KAT6 community.”
A Story That Connects and Inspires
What began as a school project has grown into a heartfelt movement of awareness and inclusion. Through KAT6 and Me, Lindsey Murphy and Kristin O’Brien remind readers that every story, no matter how small, has the power to connect, to teach, and to bring hope to families everywhere.“I learned that hope grows when it’s shared,” Kristin reflects. “Every message from another family, every photo of a child holding the book, reminds me that stories can connect people who might have otherwise felt alone.”About the AuthorsKristin Ross O’Brien is a writer, advocate, and mother of four living in Boonville, Missouri. Her family is passionate about inclusion and rare disease awareness.Dr. Lindsey Murphy is an Associate Professor of Child Life at Missouri State University and a dedicated advocate for children with complex medical needs.Read More about their journey in Q&A: Dr. Lindsey Murphy and Kristin Ross O'Brien


Empowering Families Through the Empowered Grant
"Wilder has done so well with the therapies she has received with the help of the Empowered Grant!" KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes are a pair of rare genetic variants that can cause a spectrum of health complications, impacting those diagnosed to varying degrees. As a foundation, we strive to spread awareness and advance research surrounding these syndromes. Part of this mission is fostering a strong community that supports individuals diagnosed and their families.
However, while essential and irreplaceable, support alone is not enough to address the wide range of complications many individuals face. Therapies and accessibility equipment—among other forms of treatment—allow individuals diagnosed with KAT6A and KAT6B to experience life more fully and with greater ease. Unfortunately, the more impactful the solution, the higher the cost—expenses that not everyone can afford.
Empowered Grants provide individuals diagnosed with KAT6A and KAT6B the funding needed to purchase assistive equipment, treatments, and technologies that may otherwise be out of reach.
Take Jack’s family, for example. While society has become increasingly accessible, there is still much work to be done—especially in historic areas where equipment like Jack’s wheelchair can be difficult to maneuver.
With help from the Empowered Grant, Jack’s family was able to purchase a portable ramp that has allowed them to take Jack into shops and restaurants with ease. Jack’s mother, Elyse, explains, “Purchasing and using the ramp in public has not only helped us, but helped many others, as the ramp has encouraged local business owners to purchase their own portable ramps for public use!”
Families have also used the grant to address more specialized needs. For example, David Exl explains that his daughter, Ella, was diagnosed with KAT6A, “which affects both her mental and physical development,” and “CVI (Cortical Visual Impairment), a visual processing disorder that makes it difficult for Ella to interpret visual stimuli.”
Using the Empowered Grant to fund Ella’s physical therapy, Exl shared that “a major milestone came in the fall of 2023 when she started crawling—it was the first time she could move around on her own.”
In addition to medical treatments, meaningful social connections have proven instrumental in the lives of KAT6 families. The Empowered Grant also supports these connections by helping families—like Siahna Anderson’s—fund special programs such as summer camps.
According to Shannon Anderson, Siahna’s mother, at “Adams Camp—a camp designed specifically for kids with special needs—” Siahna “gets to experience camp activities such as swimming, canoeing, horseback riding, summer tubing, shopping, and overnights with friends.” She also receives therapies such as speech, music, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and art therapy.
These programs offer individuals with KAT6 a sense of belonging and normalcy that may be difficult to experience otherwise. Living with any condition can be scary and isolating, but the opportunities made possible by the Empowered Grant can ease that burden through new experiences and meaningful connections.
Backed by our generous donors, we have awarded more than 120 Empowered Grants to KAT6 families around the world. Whether for medical equipment or specialized therapies, this funding provides individuals access to essential resources tailored to their unique needs. The KAT6 Foundation remains deeply committed to supporting our community through Empowered Grants—and the life-changing opportunities they make possible.
Learn more about how to apply for an Empowered Grant to support your child here.

KAT6 Foundation Selected as a 2024 #RAREis Global Advocate Grant Recipient
We're excited to announce that we've been selected as a 2024 #RAREis Global Advocate Grant recipient by the #RAREis program from Amgen! In total Amgen awarded 75 one-time $5,000 grants to global rare disease advocacy organizations to support programs and disease education initiatives.
We’re motivated to continue making a positive impact for the rare disease community by expanding our efforts in KAT6 education and advocacy as we work to address the needs of all those impacted.
Learn more about the #RAREisGrant here: https://www.rareiscommunity.com/rareis-global-advocate-grant/
#RAREisTM began as a social media campaign launched by Horizon Therapeutics, now Amgen, in 2017 to elevate the voices, faces and experiences of the rare disease community. It has since grown into a global program that provides individuals and families around the world with access to resources that connect, inform and educate as they navigate their daily lives. The hashtag (#), #RAREis, remains as a way to follow the conversation on social media and remains in the name and logo to represent the broader program and community. As part of their mission, they strive to improve the experience of living with a rare disease by providing support to many organizations that offer crucial programs and services for people living with rare diseases.

KAT6 on Screen
July 1, 2023
Working through ZebraKinder — our KAT6 counterpart in Austria, filmmaker Niko Mylonas has released the new production, “Genetic Defekt.” Coordinated by executive producer (USA) Emile Najm for the KAT6 Foundation and retaining its German title, the production is available in English narrated by our own Katie Bator as well as in its original German.
While the film does touch on the technical aspects of KAT6, it is, in essence, an opportunity to get acquainted with families at home and abroad who live with KAT6A and KAT6B. We of course want to educate ourselves on the ways in which the genetic defect expresses itself in its several variations, but the film centers around the daily lives of those affected.
We see in the film the spectrum from subtle, almost unnoticeable effect to severe impairment, depending on the type of gene anomaly — truncation, missense, deletion, and other variants. We meet Ella in Innsbruck and her advocate-aunt, Monika Rammal. We visit Gianna in Michigan, Samantha in Germany, Will in New York, Warren, Bay, Max, Hadley, and many more. We hear from some of the scientists and parent-advocates we’re familiar with including Dr. Jacqueline Harris, Dr. Angie Serrano, Aimee and Jeff Reitzen, Susan and George Hartung. We visit with the Najm family, who, on behalf of Peter, had the inspiration in 2017 to organize parents in starting a foundation for KAT6 support and research.
In addition to a glimpse into the everyday trials and sweet triumphs of those who live with KAT6, the film lets us spend a poignant few minutes with the parents of Helin, a girl in Germany who fell ill and, although brought to a hospital, did not survive. Her parents share the message to be learned from that tragedy.
While the film points out that the disease is yet rare, it is not new. Nor perhaps is it as rare as was previously thought. And that could be the film’s lasting contribution. Once you’ve seen it, show it to others, speak of it, send it, share it widely. Make it the centerpiece of a gathering or fund-raiser. And make clear that, whenever there is a question of a genetic irregularity in a child, testing is available. Our children deserve the care we can give, and we, as parents and caregivers, deserve the best information.
At 48 minutes in length, “Genetic Defekt” is a tool we have long needed to promote awareness of the adversity that has brought us together.
-OR-

Picture: Kuno Büsel (left) and Niko Mylonas (right)
We are pleased to announce that on September 28, 2023, the KAT6 Foundation was awarded the Austrian Child Welfare Award, the MYKI-Award 2023 for the film.

Picture: Executive Producer (Austria) Monika Rammal receiving the MYKI-Award on behalf of the KAT6 Foundation.

The KAT6 Foundation Establishes Committee to Study Mortality
TO ALL KAT6 CAREGIVERS:
A PLEA FOR INFORMATION
The KAT6 Foundation has established a committee to study mortality within our community. It is sobering to realize that there is a need for this. While we are all here to surround and support those burdened with the loss of a loved one, the ultimate objectives for this committee are to guide parents in understanding how best to adjust to KAT6 disorders and to prevent suffering among our most vulnerable members.
As parents we are silently alert for signs that our child is in distress, which can arise due to sickness, physical trauma, or emotion. We watch for the expected discomfort of common illnesses.
A child who is upset may simply be complaining out of selfishness or a violated sense of fairness, and what’s wrong can be easily fixed. When we hear crying or whining, though, especially when children are immature and lack verbal skills, we pay attention to the other ways they communicate.
AN OVER-RIDING CONCERN
Our children with KAT6 disorders must endure the usual childhood ailments, but they (and we) may not suspect less-common possibilities that lurk in the background. Heart conditions and bone frailty are two that have proved common, but one more affliction has been responsible for claiming the most lives among our affected population: bowel obstructions. Over a three-year period we have lost as many as five members of our tiny group to this tragic cause.
Slow motility in the gut — weakness of the muscles that push the contents along — is a common KAT6 disorder. Symptoms of a bowel obstruction are subtle at first and can be mistaken for something else. Obstructions do not readily clear without intervention, and there is no easy test until the situation has become critical.
Many of our kids have a high tolerance for pain and, when in distress, may at first seem merely to be cranky or anti-social. If their sleep patterns are already poor — and that is common — then we may not notice this one more thing contributing to their insomnia.
It is hard to imagine a child’s misery, unable to describe the pain, when we, the care givers who know our children, and the medical providers have not yet even suspected gut pain. And it horrifies us to think that a child can die not understanding why we are failing to do something to ease the agony.
WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW
With the high proportion of deaths due to this one cause, the mortality committee urgently asks parents and caregivers to help. With an eye to preventing the suffering of even one more bewildered and innocent member, the committee needs data, clear, reliable, factual information.
While we await autopsy reports, it is especially important that all KAT6 individuals be entered into the NORD Registry. The more we know about the ways in which KAT6 disorders are manifested the better the Foundation can support meaningful research, support caregivers, and help assure the comfort and well-being of the ones who have brought us all together.
To create a registry entry for a person with KAT6A or KAT6B, please use the link: https://kat6a.iamrare.org/Account/Register
To update an existing registry entry, and ideally you would do so annually, please go to: https://kat6a.iamrare.org/Account/Login
WHAT HAPPENS TO THE DATA
De-identified data in the KAT6A/KAT6B Patient Registry is available to scientists — including medical professionals, geneticists, pharmacologists, nutritionists, and others — who want to study any aspect of KAT6A and KAT6B. The KAT6 Foundation provides funding for many such research projects.
Members of the Foundation and the mortality committee are notified of the loss of a community member only through our support network, not by NORD or any other agent that is properly committed to privacy. Our ability, as a committee of the Foundation, to obtain an autopsy report and other information depends on the willingness of those who are affected and have access to the report and the details of the family’s loss.
To contact a member of the mortality committee, please use the contact form at https://kat6.org/contact or add a post to the KAT6 Support Group page at Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/803280496369674
Your information may help save a life!

KAT6 Foundation Reaches Milestone as First Funded Research Project is Published
We are proud to report that research led by Dr. José A. Sánchez-Alcázar and his team was published by Genes on November 15, 2022 in an article titled Pantothenate and L-carnitine Supplementation Corrects Pathological Alterations in Cellular Models of KAT6A Syndrome. This is an important milestone for our Foundation as it is the first research project that we directly funded to reach publication, and is an important step forward on the path to finding a treatment for KAT6 individuals. Development of surrogate models simulating KAT6A gene variation is the first step towards understanding the pathophysiological alterations caused by this gene variation. By outlining pathophysiological pathways, treatment model(s) addressing alterations in these pathways can be developed for testing.
Three individuals with KAT6A gene variation participated in the study conducted at Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Spain. An initial series of experiments generated evidence supporting the use of patient-derived fibroblast to study KAT6A gene variation. The team identified four critical pathophysiological processes altered by KAT6A gene variation: 1) Coenzyme A (CoA) metabolism, 2) Iron metabolism, 3) Enzymatic antioxidant system and 4) Mitochondrial function. Two compounds were identified to have a positive impact on the altered physiological pathways. These compounds are: 1) Pantothenate and 2) L-carnitine. Pantothenate is a CoA metabolism activator and L-carnitine is a mitochondrial boosting agent. Supplementation with pantothenate and L-carnitine supported the survival of the KAT6A fibroblast in a stress inducing medium. The concentration of pantothenate and L-carnitine varied in all three KAT6A cell lines suggesting that different type of mutations respond differently to these positive compounds. The KAT6A gene plays a significant role in histone acetylation which is a key process involved in cell progression and differentiation. Supplementation with pantothenate and L-carnitine resulted in significant increase in histone acetylation, recovery of gene expression patterns and expression levels of proteins affected due to the KAT6A gene variation.
We want to extend our sincere thanks to Dr. José A. Sánchez-Alcázar and his entire team for their professionalism and commitment to rare disease research and the KAT6 community. We look forward to building upon this partnership in the future.

Recap of KAT6A & KAT6B Virtual Symposium: GI Health and Beyond
The Gastrointestinal Health and Beyond in Children with Rare Genetic Variations was a 2-hour long, patient-centered, collaborative event organized by the KAT6 Foundation. It was designed to fuel conversation about the gastrointestinal challenges faced by children with KAT6A and KAT6B gene variations and enable open dialogue between families, clinicians, and researchers. The webinar provided a platform for the KAT6 community to expand its network and build connections with new researchers and experts working on tackling GI and GI related issues. More than 90 individuals registered for this event. On the day of the webinar, 20 families and 35 scientists attended the event. With some international representation, the majority of the families and researchers were based in the USA.
Dr. Tanya Tripathi, research coordinator of the KAT6 Foundation moderated three scientific presentations by renowned scientists – Dr. Sarkis Mazmanian, Dr. Gustavo Mostoslavsky and Dr. Richard I Kelley. Please read the summary of the presentations here.
Research Updates

2025 KAT6 Foundation Newly Funded Research Projects
We are pleased to support eight new studies advancing our understanding of KAT6 syndrome.
These projects address disease mechanisms, model development, potential therapies, and biomarkers—laying critical groundwork for clinical trials.
1. Engineering novel genetic tools to unravel the complex KAT6-disease phenotype
Chief Investigator: Effie Apostolou, PhD
Institution: Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City
Dr. Apostolou’s team is working to create a stem cell genetic model which will allow them to control the amount of KAT6A and KAT6B proteins available in a cell. This will allow them to see how different amounts of these proteins affect cell development and highlight future potential therapeutic targets. The group is committed to making their model available to the broader research community. (This study is fully funded by an anonymous donor.)
2. Patient-specific neurodevelopmental models for KAT6B mutations
Principal Investigator: Valerie Arboleda, MD, PhD
Institution: David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
This study leverages patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines to investigate how specific KAT6B variants contribute to the phenotypic divergence between Genitopatellar Syndrome (GPS) and Say-Barber-Biesecker-Young-Simpson syndrome (SBBYSS). Brain-like cells grown from patient samples will help researchers understand condition-specific development and open the door to personalized therapies.
3. Neurobehavioral differences in early- and late-truncating KAT6A mouse models
Principal Investigator: Valerie Arboleda, MD, PhD
Institution: David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Arboleda’s team is creating new, KAT6A variant-specific mouse models to study how different types of KAT6A variants affect brain development and behavior. Based on data from their lab, they will test therapies to see if it can help improve symptoms in mice with severe KAT6A mutations. This study brings us closer to testing treatments that target the specific effects of different mutations in people.
4. Biomarker discovery in KAT6A for translation into clinical trials
Chief Investigator: Sarah Donoghue, MBBS, FRACP
Institution: Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI), University of Melbourne, Melbourne
This project seeks biomarkers in blood and brain tissues to further understand how cognitive function develops in KAT6A with the hope that we will be able to use this information to measure disease progression and treatment success. This work is building on multi-Omic work that we are doing in the lab to characterize KAT6A models of mice and KAT6A human cortical neuron experiments. We are hoping to understand the impact of KAT6A on brain function in mice and whether carnitine treatment improves this, paving the way for future human trials. Together, these studies will help get us closer to starting clinical trials in people with KAT6A syndrome.
5. A multidisciplinary clinical program and identification of a metabolomic profile in KAT6A/KAT6B conditions to inform clinical trial readiness
Co-Investigators: Olaf Bodamer, MD, PhD andWilliam Brucker, MD, PhD
Institution: Boston Children’s Hospital & Harvard Medical School, Boston
Dr. Bodamer is launching a new clinical program for patients with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes at Boston Children’s Hospital. The team will collect detailed health data and samples from patients to better understand the natural course of these conditions. They’ll also search for unique biomarkers that could help doctors know when a treatment is working. This project combines high-quality patient care with research aimed at preparing for future clinical trials.
6. Epigenetic landscapes and gene regulation in KAT6 disorders
Co-Investigators: Maria A. Serrano, PhD and Gustavo Mostoslavsky, MD, PhD
Institution: Center for Regenerative Medicine & Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston
This research examines how KAT6 mutations affect gene regulation in brain, gut, and blood cells. The team will use an advanced method to see how these cells’ “epigenetic landscapes” (chemical markers that control gene activity) are different from healthy cells. It may also identify blood-based biomarkers for easier monitoring of disease progression and treatment.
7. CA3 neuronal development in KAT6A and KAT6B patient-derived iPSCs
Principal Investigators: Thomas Durcan, PhD, Faïza Benaliouad, PhD and Gilles Maussion, PhD
Institution: Neuro: Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital & McGill University, Montreal
Focusing on the CA3 hippocampal region linked to memory, this study uses patient-derived stem cells to uncover how brain cell development is altered in KAT6 syndromes. The goal is to find points for therapeutic intervention.
8. When Proteins Go Wrong: Unravelling the Impact of KAT6 Variants on Protein Structure and Function
Principal Investigator: Shabih Shakeel, PhD
Institution: Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
This project is focused on characterizing the effects of different KAT6A and KAT6B mutations on protein structure and important protein functions such as binding with protein partners and acetylation. They will do this first characterization by isolating the proteins and studying them in test tubes. Dr. Shakeel’s team will then see how these changes in function lead to downstream changes to actual cells. (This study is fully funded by an anonymous donor.)

MCRI is Seeking Participants for New KAT6A Research Study
Biomarker discovery in KAT6A for translation into clinical trials
For KAT6A syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders, researchers are starting to understand the dysregulated cellular processes affecting neurons and their supporting cells. The Chromatin Disorders Research Team at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute is currently using a mouse model, alongside human cortical neurons to study gene expression and metabolomics KAT6A syndrome, in collaboration with Professor Anne Voss at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research. This work is being led by PhD student Dr Sarah Donoghue and supervised by Professor David Amor and Professor Paul Lockhart. The goal of this project is to understand the differences in brain development that occur in KAT6A syndrome, and to identify biomarkers that may show response to treatment in clinical trials.
The team is looking to extend their work on blood biomarkers in KAT6A mice to children and adults with KAT6A syndrome. In this project, they will measure a range of molecular compounds in blood samples from human participants with KAT6A syndrome, using untargeted metabolomic and proteomic analyses. They will compare the plasma profile of 50 KAT6A syndrome participants to the plasma samples of 20 participants without KAT6A syndrome. The aim is to identify biomarkers that are detectable in the plasma of participants with KAT6A syndrome, with the hope that these can be translated for use in clinical trials, as an objective measure of treatment efficacy as the community proceeds to clinical trials.
For more information about this research, please contact Sarah Donoghue at sarah.donoghue@mcri.edu.au.

Attention Researchers
ATTENTION RESEARCHERS:
The KAT6 Foundation is addressing a critical research priority raised by families—gastrointestinal challenges faced by children with KAT6A and KAT6B. This population experiences a concerning increase in mortality due to poor GI motility and perforation. Tragically, we recently lost another child to GI perforation, which has heightened anxiety and urgency within the community.
We are keen to better understand the factors that contribute to susceptibility to poor motility, bowel obstruction, and the risk of perforation in children with KAT6A and KAT6B. Equally important is identifying effective treatment strategies to address these serious issues.If you are interested in collaborating on this important challenge, please email the KAT6 Foundation at support@kat6a.org.
Learn more about Bowel Obstructions in the KAT6 Population.

KAT6 Foundation Reaches Milestone as First Funded Research Project is Published
We are proud to report that research led by Dr. José A. Sánchez-Alcázar and his team was published by Genes on November 15, 2022 in an article titled Pantothenate and L-carnitine Supplementation Corrects Pathological Alterations in Cellular Models of KAT6A Syndrome. This is an important milestone for our Foundation as it is the first research project that we directly funded to reach publication, and is an important step forward on the path to finding a treatment for KAT6 individuals. Development of surrogate models simulating KAT6A gene variation is the first step towards understanding the pathophysiological alterations caused by this gene variation. By outlining pathophysiological pathways, treatment model(s) addressing alterations in these pathways can be developed for testing.
Three individuals with KAT6A gene variation participated in the study conducted at Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Spain. An initial series of experiments generated evidence supporting the use of patient-derived fibroblast to study KAT6A gene variation. The team identified four critical pathophysiological processes altered by KAT6A gene variation: 1) Coenzyme A (CoA) metabolism, 2) Iron metabolism, 3) Enzymatic antioxidant system and 4) Mitochondrial function. Two compounds were identified to have a positive impact on the altered physiological pathways. These compounds are: 1) Pantothenate and 2) L-carnitine. Pantothenate is a CoA metabolism activator and L-carnitine is a mitochondrial boosting agent. Supplementation with pantothenate and L-carnitine supported the survival of the KAT6A fibroblast in a stress inducing medium. The concentration of pantothenate and L-carnitine varied in all three KAT6A cell lines suggesting that different type of mutations respond differently to these positive compounds. The KAT6A gene plays a significant role in histone acetylation which is a key process involved in cell progression and differentiation. Supplementation with pantothenate and L-carnitine resulted in significant increase in histone acetylation, recovery of gene expression patterns and expression levels of proteins affected due to the KAT6A gene variation.
We want to extend our sincere thanks to Dr. José A. Sánchez-Alcázar and his entire team for their professionalism and commitment to rare disease research and the KAT6 community. We look forward to building upon this partnership in the future.

Recap of KAT6A & KAT6B Virtual Symposium: GI Health and Beyond
The Gastrointestinal Health and Beyond in Children with Rare Genetic Variations was a 2-hour long, patient-centered, collaborative event organized by the KAT6 Foundation. It was designed to fuel conversation about the gastrointestinal challenges faced by children with KAT6A and KAT6B gene variations and enable open dialogue between families, clinicians, and researchers. The webinar provided a platform for the KAT6 community to expand its network and build connections with new researchers and experts working on tackling GI and GI related issues. More than 90 individuals registered for this event. On the day of the webinar, 20 families and 35 scientists attended the event. With some international representation, the majority of the families and researchers were based in the USA.
Dr. Tanya Tripathi, research coordinator of the KAT6 Foundation moderated three scientific presentations by renowned scientists – Dr. Sarkis Mazmanian, Dr. Gustavo Mostoslavsky and Dr. Richard I Kelley. Please read the summary of the presentations here.

Recap of KAT6A & KAT6B Virtual Symposium: Speech & Language
On March 24, 2022, The KAT6A Foundation hosted the second KAT6A and KAT6B Virtual Symposium. The event was designed to solidify the KAT6A and KAT6B research network of clinicians and researchers through identification of research gaps, opportunities and collaborations. The symposium series aims to drive patient- centered and collaborative research to improve outcomes for individuals with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes. The symposium series also aims to spark new collaborations among the KAT6A and KAT6B research groups and healthcare communities.The first KAT6A and KAT6B symposium, conducted in 2021, discussed a range of neurodevelopmental challenges faced by children with KAT6A and KAT6B gene variations. The second symposium expanded on the stakeholder representation to include parents of children with KAT6A and KAT6B gene variations along with health care professionals, clinicians, and researchers. This symposium focused on understanding the impact of KAT6A and KAT6B gene variations on speech and language development, a domain that is most commonly affected in this population of children.10 speakers and nearly 60 members of the KAT6 community attended the the symposium. The symposium ran for three hours and was organized in two sessions: the first session provided an overview of the KAT6A Foundation’s goal to empower patient-centered research and initiatives led by the Foundation to support research. The second session focused on understanding the pathophysiology of KAT6A and KAT6B related speech and language disorders.
Please read the symposium recap pdf for a complete summary of each presentation. The next virtual symposium is tentatively scheduled in September 2022. This symposium will focus on unraveling the range of gastrointestinal difficulties faced by individuals diagnosed with KAT6A and KAT6B syndromes.

